I have read that in Hamiltonian systems, Lyapunov exponents come in pairs $(\lambda_i, \lambda_{2N-i+1})$ such that their sum is equal to zero.
Is there a way of proving this analytically?
EDIT: Saw this here.
In symplectic systems, LEs come in pairs $(\lambda_i, \lambda_{2N-i+1})$ such that their sum is equal to zero. This means that the Lyapunov spectrum is symmetric. It is a way of emphasizing the invariance of Hamiltonian dynamics under change of the time arrow.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-12-07 13:22 (UTC), posted by SE-user Cheeku